On a Tuesday afternoon, you can find peer support groups meeting in classroom buildings, therapy appointment reminders on student mental health apps, and friends discussing their therapists over lunch with the same ease that people used to discuss weekend plans on any urban university campus in the United States or the United Kingdom. Something has changed. Not slowly, but swiftly and in a way that fifteen years ago would have seemed nearly unthinkable to the same demographic.
It’s difficult to dispute the numbers. In 2021, nearly 42 percent of high school students reported feeling depressed or hopeless, a significant increase from 28 percent ten years prior, according to CDC data. Gen Z has become the most therapy-engaged generation in history, currently occupying the 18–29 age range that psychologists consider to be one of the most emotionally turbulent stages of life. They’re not holding out for the worst. Before things get that far, an increasing number of them are opening a telehealth app or going into a therapist’s office.

The collapse of stigma is one of the factors causing this. For the majority of the 20th century, mental health was only discussed in private and when there was no other choice. Anxiety and depression were managed by earlier generations through self-medication, enduring them, or just not naming them at all. The change wasn’t made overnight. Even though social media has been shown to impact young people’s mental health negatively, it has also been the means by which well-known voices—athletes, musicians, and influencers with millions of followers—have normalized seeking assistance. When someone with that level of reach publicly discloses that they are in therapy, it alters the calculus for a twenty-two-year-old who is considering making the call.
However, the scope of what’s occurring cannot be explained by decreased stigma alone. There is a genuinely distinct generational experience of stress, not just one that is discussed more candidly. A curated, real-time comparison engine that runs constantly in every teen’s pocket was introduced by social media and had no exact historical counterpart.
In contrast to the concerns of previous generations, the constant exposure to other people’s highlight reels—professionally successful, physically perfect, and constantly traveling—created a standard against which everyday life feels inadequate. Add to that the burden of student loan debt, the ongoing anxiety about climate change that many young adults report, and the economic uncertainty that has made the conventional indicators of adult stability seem genuinely unattainable. There is a lot of “adulting” pressure.
All of this was accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic, which disrupted the social scaffolding that many young people depended on—campus life, school structures, and the regular rhythm of peer interaction—exactly when those connections are most crucial for their development. Beginning in 2021, clinicians noticed the downstream effects in their teletherapy queues and waiting rooms. After the pandemic, what had been a consistent trend toward earlier therapy-seeking became more of a wave.
The trend toward preventative care is arguably the most intriguing—and most dissimilar from earlier generations’ approaches to mental health. In times of crisis, such as following a divorce, breakdown, or loss, older generations were more likely to seek therapy.
Nowadays, a growing number of young adults arrive with stress that is more persistent than transient but less severe than a crisis. exhaustion. Anxiety that is tolerable but draining. uncertainty regarding one’s identity and course. a hazy but enduring feeling that something needs to be resolved before it gets worse. This generation’s intuitive understanding is supported by research: 70% of mental health disorders manifest before the age of 25, making early intervention not only emotionally sensible but also clinically significant.
A decade ago, the infrastructure was unable to meet this demand. The logistical obstacles that previously made getting mental health care truly inconvenient—finding a provider, commuting, taking time off, and dealing with a lack of appointments—have been eliminated by teletherapy platforms. The concept of a video therapy session is not unfamiliar to digital natives who handle everything else on their phones. It’s just… clear. People who might have been hesitant when the only option was a weekly in-person appointment with a therapist whose availability and insurance acceptance were uncertain have been drawn in by this accessibility.
Observing this generation navigate their twenties gives me the impression that something genuinely challenging is happening alongside something generational. Together, they are making the decision to confront issues that previous generations avoided. Whether the therapy engagement results in long-term wellbeing or whether the supply of mental health care can meet the demand is still up for debate. However, rather than being pathologized as fragility, the decision to seek help early and treat emotional health as something that needs maintenance rather than emergency rescue is a shift that deserves to be understood on its own terms.

